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Focus on the Profession

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Title: Leadership Development: How to Replace Yourself in 7 Easy Steps Author: Neal.Couture Last modified by: neal.couture Created Date: 1/9/2006 6:23:02 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Focus on the Profession


1
Focus on the Profession
  • Lenn Vincent
  • National President, NCMA
  • 2007 Mid-Year Leadership Conference
  • Orlando, Florida

2
Objective
  • Understand whats happening to the contract
    management profession.
  • Learn about the top issues facing the profession.
  • Discuss how NCMA is responding to these
    challenges, and how your chapters can be involved.

3
NCMA Values and Behaviors
Achieving NCMA Mission and Vision
  • People
  • Listen, think and dialogue openly, often
  • Recognize and celebrate successes
  • Achieve unity through fairness and respect for
    all
  • Value our current and past board members
  • Excellence
  • Live NCMA Mission and Vision
  • Embrace superior contract management
  • Challenge the possible
  • Exceed expectations
  • Integrity
  • Do the right thing
  • Be open and honest
  • Seek to understandask why
  • Commitment
  • Be engaged
  • Do what you say
  • Help each other to be part of the solution
  • Question and challenge constructively
  • Community
  • Be visible in the NCMA community where you work
    live
  • Respect work-life balance

4
Elements of a Changing Environment
  • Acquisition workforce
  • Working conditions
  • Acquisition rules
  • The supply base
  • Acquisition of goods and services

5
Your Role is Changing
  • More strategic presence, to guide organization
    through high risk.
  • Relationship manager, to deal with increased
    complexity of value chain.
  • Ambidextrous contractually, dealing with both
    buy and sell deals.
  • Technology competent, to master new tools being
    fielded by company and customers.
  • Multi-tasker, to deal with more projects of
    competing priorities.

6
Quick Look at the DemographicsAge
  • The typical (median) respondent is 48 years old
    the first reduction in 10 years!

7
Our members
  • Contract Manager
  • Contract Administrator
  • Contract Negotiator
  • Contracting Officer
  • Procurement Specialist
  • Buyer
  • Accountant
  • Price analyst
  • Attorney
  • Project Manager
  • Business Manager
  • Sales manager
  • Property Administrator
  • and many more!

8
Quick Look at the DemographicsIndustry
  • The bulk of respondents (49) work in private
    industry. 30 work for the federal government
    (including military) 3 for state or local
    governments 4 in professional service firms 7
    in commercial businesses 1 in academia and 5
    elsewhere.

9
Quick Look at the DemographicsEducation
  • A majority of respondents hold at least a Masters
    degree 40 a Masters, and 5 a Doctorate. 41
    report the Bachelors as their highest educational
    attainment, and most of the rest have had at
    least some college .

10
Quick Look at the DemographicsCertification
  • Almost half of respondents (45) indicated they
    possess one or more of the certifications asked
    about
  • DAWIA Level III (15)
  • CPCM (11)
  • CFCM (5)
  • DAWIA Level II (9
  • CPM or APP (4)
  • Direct correlation between compensation and
    certification

11
DAU and FAI Equivalency for NCMA Certifications
  • Equivalency to Legacy DAU Courses approved
    December 13, 2006
  • CFCM CON 101 Introduction to Contracting
    (4-week course)
  • CPCM CON 202 Intermediate Contracting (2-week
    course) and CON 210 Contract Law (1-week course)
  • Equivalency to New DAU Curriculum is under
    review (as of January 2, 2007)

12
Implications of DAU Equivalency
  • Reduces barrier for entry from Industry to
    Federal service
  • Saves up to 7 weeks of an individuals time away
    from the job
  • Saves up to 7,000 in training costs (cost of
    attending CON 101, 202, 210 equivalent courses
    with approved private offerors)
  • Reduces training backlog for Federal Agencies who
    employ CFCMs and CPCMs in meeting new OFPP
    certification requirements
  • Aides in increasing the size of the contractor
    labor pool for 1102 work which has been
    outsourced
  • RFPs for such outsourcing typically demand DAWIA
    Level I or Level II qualified personnel
  • Increases the market value of the
    certifications and those individuals who hold them

13
Quick Look at the DemographicsJob Level
  • Asked to indicate which of six choices most
    closely matched their management level, 9 chose
    executive, 16 senior-level, 12 supervisor, 19
    mid-management, 37 experienced
    (non-supervisory), and 4 entry level. A
    near-majority of those working for the federal
    government (48) place themselves in the
    experienced (non-supervisory) category.

14
Quick Look at the DemographicsJob Category
contract management 55
purchasing 7
business management 5
subcontract management 3
legal 3
consulting 3
program management 2
policy and analysis 2
others 1 or less
  • A related question asked which of 38 choices most
    closely matched respondents' job categories.
    "Contract management" was the runaway choice, at
    55 all others were named by fewer than 10

15
Quick Look at the DemographicsJob Title
Manager 29
Specialist 20
Administrator 14
Director 8
Analyst 7
Officer 4
President 3
Vice President 3
others 1 or less
  • Asked about specific job titles, respondents most
    frequently named Manager, Specialist, and
    Administrator.

16
Issues Affecting the CM Profession
17
Job Issues Affecting Our Members
18
Federal Contracting Hot Topics
  • Congressional oversight and investigations
    (ethics, misspending)
  • Acquisition reform
  • Acquisition Advisory Panel
  • DAPA recommendations
  • Acquisition workforce hiring, training and
    certification
  • Interagency contracts
  • Organizational Conflict of Interest

19
NCMA Strategic Objectives
  • Creating the Next Generation of CM Professionals
  • Call for LDP applications
  • Advocacy
  • Increase Federal Contracting penetration

20
NCMA News
  • Governance change
  • Certification equivalency
  • Macfarlan Research Program
  • Chapter Guide
  • World Congress 2007
  • NES programs
  • Leadership
  • Cost and Pricing Analysis
  • Developing Solicitations and Proposals
  • Earned Value Management (EVM)

21
NCMA News
  • Publications
  • CMBOK Annotated
  • Desktop Guide 6th Edition
  • Technology upgrades
  • New membership system Microsoft CRM
  • Website management Content Management System
    (CMS)
  • Online course system EducationDirector
  • Office relocation

22
What you can do.
  • Lead by your actions
  • Be a Chief Courage Officer
  • Stay informed on the issues
  • Have opinions, and engage in the discussion
  • Participate in continuous learning
  • Resist cynicism and skepticism
  • Participate in your NCMA chapter

Engage in your profession
23
Our Future
The future is not a result of choices among
alternative paths offered by the present, but a
place that is created . . . First in the mind,
and then in the will . . . Next in activity. The
future is not some place we are going to, but one
we are creating . . . - John Schaar, Futurist
24
For further assistance
  • Neal J. Couture, CPCM
  • Executive Director
  • 571-382-1123
  • couture_at_ncmahq.org
  • Rita Rose
  • Membership Manager
  • 571-382-1132
  • rrose_at_ncmahq.org
  • Wendy Murrah
  • Chapter Relations Manager
  • 800/344-8096 x411
  • murrah_at_ncmahq.org
  • Lenn Vincent, RADM, USN (Ret.), Fellow
  • President
  • 703-805-4944
  • lenn.vincent_at_dau.mil
  • Ronald Smith, CPCM, Fellow
  • President-Elect
  • 321-674-3522
  • rsmith3082_at_aol.com
  • Karen H. Reuter, CPCM, Fellow
  • Past President
  • 410-884-9001
  • khrrdr_at_msn.com
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